Box office ,
The Alto Knights has grossed $6.1million in the United States and Canada, and $3.5million in other territories for a worldwide total of $9.6million. In the United States and Canada,
The Alto Knights was released alongside
Snow White and
Ash, and was projected to gross $2–3 million from 2,651 theaters in its opening weekend. It ended up debuting to $3.2 million, finishing in sixth; 77% of the audience was over 35 years old, while 58% were men. In its second weekend the film made $1.1 million, dropping 65%. The following weekend the film was removed from 2,480 theaters down to 171; the 93.9% loss was the 11th-largest such drop in history.
Critical response Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale, while
PostTrak reported that 44% of filmgoers would "definitely recommend" it.
Frank Scheck in
The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "If this film feels familiar, that's because it is. From its pedigree to its casting to its themes, Levinson's new effort comes across like a retread. ... Novelistic in its detail and talky to the extreme, the film feels longer than it is." For
Empire, Laura Venning gave the film 3/5 stars, writing: "It all feels like handsomely crafted Scorsese-lite, but enjoyably so, like sinking into a shabby but much-loved armchair. ... De Niro puts in a typically solid, commanding performance as big boss Frank but is clearly having more fun chewing the scenery beneath layers of prosthetics as the volatile Vito, ... Occasionally clunky and retrograde but in the same manner as a story told by a grandparent,
The Alto Knights reminds us that De Niro will always be cinema's greatest gangster."
Peter Bradshaw, in
The Guardian, gave 2/5 stars, writing: "As Vito, De Niro is gloweringly resentful, taciturn, bad-tempered and wears glasses and a hat. As Frank, De Niro is gloweringly resentful, taciturn, slightly less bad-tempered and doesn’t wear glasses or a hat. ... There is a kind of solidity and force to the film in its opening act, but its interest dwindles and we get little in the way of either ambition or moment-by-moment humour." Wendy Ide in
The Observer gave 2/5 stars, writing: "Levinson hit on the bafflingly ill-advised idea of casting Robert De Niro in both of the two lead roles of Frank and Vito. Which, while it does make the picture distinctive, unfortunately doesn't make it good. A meandering
Goodfellas-style narration, growled to camera by Frank, fails to boost the film's flagging energy, and since De Niro's approach is to deliver two very slightly different but equally hammy performances, the whole dual-role gimmick is more distracting than interesting. Still, if you must watch it, you can at least amuse yourself by spotting the join where De Niro-as-Frank's fake nose is glued on." In
The Independent Clarisse Loughrey also gave 2/5 stars, writing: "Sure,
The Alto Knights might provide double the De Niro, but you could easily achieve the same effect by playing
Goodfellas and
Casino on two screens side by side. It would be about as cohesive an experience."
Justin Chang, writing for
NPR, concluded that the film "doesn't seem to trust its own story" and that he was not "sure exactly what the movie gains from having one actor play both roles", but that "De Niro is clearly at home with this gangland material, and it's fun to watch him argue with himself."
Accolades ==References==